Tag Archives: learning

Innovation in Education Shortlisted for 2025 QS Reimagine Education Awards

Toronto, October 19, 2025 – We’re thrilled to announce that Lern2Ern has been shortlisted for the prestigious 2025 QS Reimagine Education Awards in the Nurturing Employability Award category (Venture – Early Stage).

This international recognition validates over a decade of classroom innovation focused on transforming education from passive consumption to active ownership, where students build genuine career capital through authentic problem-solving.

What Makes Lern2Ern Different

Lern2Ern represents a fundamental shift in how we think about learning and employment readiness. Rather than treating students as consumers of education, our platform positions them as creators and owners of their intellectual property. Students tackle real-world challenges—from sustainability projects to community problem-solving—earning blockchain-verified credentials that demonstrate actual capabilities to future employers.

Built on our Bronze Award-winning “Bootstrapping Checklist” methodology, Lern2Ern addresses three critical gaps identified by the QS Future Skills Index and International Labour Organization research:

  • Ownership Justice: Students retain full intellectual property rights to their innovations
  • Skills Verification: Blockchain-powered credentials provide employers with reliable proof of capabilities
  • Real-World Relevance: Every project connects learning to emerging career pathways in AI, digital, and green economies

What Students Are Saying

Our recent Innovation Sprint pilot has generated encouraging feedback from Grade 8 students:

On their overall experience:
I think Lern2ern is valuable because each of us worked so hard on making an app, making it work and doing everything more for the app to work and asking each of our classmates what’s the problem in our school and it took a lot of time.


We finally made Vitranslator, but still a prototype, but we’re still working on it. Yes, I believe Lern2Ern is very valuable to me because it helped me learn many new skills and think more creatively. I really enjoyed working with my friends to solve real problems that we see every day at school. Together, we spent a lot of time designing and building our app, trying our best to make the prototype work. We asked our classmates about the issues they face so we could create something that could actually make a difference. This experience taught me the importance of teamwork, problem-solving, and never giving up, even when something feels challenging.


I believe that Lern2ern is important to me because it is a platform where I can share ideas to solve real problems and change my community, country and the world. It pretty fun because we got to work with people and try things that we wouldn’t normally do.

On earning digital badges:

  • “I felt really good about myself”
  • “I felt accomplished and proud of myself”
  • “Pretty good, it felt like I accomplished something”

On the value of Lern2Ern: Students consistently highlighted the real-world connection and ownership as key benefits:

  • “I believe that Lern2ern is valuable because it provides hands-on, real-world learning experiences”
  • “It helps students develop essential skills like critical thinking, collaboration, and problem-solving”
  • “Students can retain intellectual property rights over their achievements”

When asked if they’d recommend Lern2Ern to friends, responses were unanimously positive, citing the platform’s fun, engaging approach and the tangible value of earning recognized credentials.

Looking Ahead

This nomination comes at a pivotal moment as we prepare to scale Lern2Ern globally. With 87% of businesses reporting skills gaps and 375 million workers needing career transitions by 2030, the need for authentic, verified skill development has never been greater.

Our vision: to serve over 1 million students worldwide by 2030, establishing Lern2Ern as the global standard for student ownership in education and creating direct pathways from learning to meaningful employment.

About the QS Reimagine Education Awards

Often called “the Oscars of Education,” the QS Reimagine Education Awards recognize the most innovative and impactful educational initiatives from around the world. Being shortlisted places Lern2Ern among the world’s leading educational innovations.

Winners will be announced at the awards ceremony in December 2025.


Learn more about Lern2Ern: lern2ern.com

About Innovation in Education: Since 2022, we’ve been transforming how students learn, create, and prepare for the future of work. Our mission is to ensure every young person owns their learning journey and builds genuine career capital through authentic problem-solving.


“Education should empower students to own their innovations and control their future more. Lern2Ern makes that vision real.” – Rich Baxter, Founder

Personalized Professional Development: Fostering Creativity in the Classroom

In today’s dynamic educational landscape, the importance of personalized professional development (PD) for teachers cannot be overstated, especially when it comes to fostering creativity in the classroom. Teachers operate in varied scenarios, whether independently or within a school district, and each context presents unique challenges and opportunities. Regardless of the setting, the primary goal remains the same: to enhance the learning experience for students by encouraging creativity and critical thinking.

BOXTA 2008

The local context in which a teacher operates significantly influences their professional development journey. In regions where the education system is aligned with the goals of the government, teachers may find themselves encouraged to pursue PD. Conversely, in areas experiencing defunding and de-professionalization, teachers may struggle to access the resources they need. This disparity underscores the need for a more individualized approach to PD, one that prioritizes the teacher’s personal growth and the creative needs of their students.

Professional development should be viewed as a creative endeavor in itself. For me, PD serves my own learning and creativity, which, in turn, benefits my students. My interest lies in improving the student experience, and I actively seek feedback to guide my efforts. It’s crucial to provide students with opportunities to be creative, both inside and outside the classroom. As educators, we must model this behavior, demonstrating that creativity is a valued and integral part of learning.

To foster a creative classroom environment, teachers should be encouraged to conduct action research and develop innovative solutions to the challenges they encounter. This approach requires adopting a project management mindset, focusing on identifying problems and implementing effective solutions. Participation in initiatives such as the Reimagine Education competition, which provides sophisticated guidelines that can be scaled, exemplifies how teachers can transform their classrooms into incubators of ideas and solutions, with their students and communities.

Classrooms that prioritize creativity become breeding grounds for innovative thinking and problem-solving. School districts that support this vision should act as accelerators, providing funding and professional development to help scale these innovative solutions. Most do not.

Critical thinking is a necessary component of any creative endeavor. Traditional summative evaluations often lack room for improvement, failing to allow for iterative processes that encourage reflection and analysis. This rigid approach can be oppressive, demanding compliance from students without fostering their intrinsic motivation. When students engage in iterative processes, they transition from extrinsic to intrinsic motivation, driven by questions that matter to them. Teachers and mentors play a crucial role in guiding this process, helping students to embrace change and pursue creative solutions.

The concept of homework should be reframed as studying, emphasizing the importance of personalized and differentiated learning. Students need the freedom – the space – to curate their own learning materials, documented through sketchbooks, notebooks, and digital tools. These artifacts become valuable resources that can be digitized and used to inform personalized learning experiences – or sandboxes – which will support their usage of artificial intelligence.

BOXTA 2009

Measuring competencies presents a challenge but is not impossible. In Ontario, for instance, ‘learning skills’ are reported on, highlighting the importance of educating parents and guardians about the value of competencies beyond traditional numeric grades. The current educational climate in Ontario, marked by government defunding, poses significant challenges. Student demographic data, including demographics, absences, and report card marks, are now managed by companies like PowerSchool, owned by private equity firm Bain Capital. These entities (‘Education Leaders’) prioritize cost-cutting measures, such as reducing staffing, hardware purchases, tutoring programs, and teacher salary increases, which ultimately undermines the quality of education. In this context, who are our students actually working for?

To counteract these challenges, teachers must empower students to control and articulate their learning journeys. By teaching students to value their data and use it to inform their learning processes, we can foster a generation of creative and independent thinkers. This shift from education to learning involves engaging students in solving local problems and sharing their solutions globally, facilitated by digital platforms and open-source networks (web3!).

The future of education/learning lies in the intersection of global and local contexts, where personalized learning and creativity are prioritized. Technologies such as Web3 and blockchain will drive this evolution, offering new opportunities for engagement and innovation. Teachers and students should own and share their intellectual property on open-source networks and blockchains, ensuring that knowledge is democratized and accessible to all.

Ultimately, teachers should not rely solely on school or district PD programs, which often focus on meeting funding requirements rather than addressing teachers’ expertise and skill sets. Professional development should be personal, driven by the projects and solutions that inspire teachers to improve their students’ experiences. By building their own learning networks and sharing their work globally, teachers can model the freedom and creativity they wish to instill in their students.

BOXTA 2016

In conclusion, personalized professional development is essential for fostering creativity in the classroom. Teachers must be fierce advocates for their own learning and creativity, taking risks and engaging in processes with unknown outcomes. By creating spaces for students to connect with the analog world before engaging digitally, we can cultivate a learning environment that values creativity, critical thinking, and continuous improvement. Together, we can redefine professional development and empower teachers to transform their classrooms into vibrant, innovative spaces for learning, with or without school districts.


Innovation in Education is a blog dedicated to innovating education. All work posted on this website is free to use under a Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International(CC BY-NC 4.0). All opinions and views expressed here are of the Principal.

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